Now, after years of waiting, I’m ready to start being noticed. I want my book to be out there in the world, a real thing. A real book that someone I have never met will pick up, read and be taken away from their life for a few hours. A book that will feed imaginations, lurk at the back of people’s thoughts as they walk through London – or any thriving city, a book that might inspire.

Being a writer – a published-and-being-read-by-other-people writer isn’t something I have been able to stumble into – and you know, I’m glad. Because I think being one of those successful writers I crave to be is something one has to train for. It requires stamina and endurance, because if I got a contract, it wouldn’t be the end of this quest.

It would be the beginning. It would be the part of the adventure where I reach the port, and find the ship waiting to board for new lands and new challenges. There will be demons in those lands because I will take them with me. I will always suffer dark times of fear, and there will always be triumphs. My challengers will no longer be gatekeeper agents and publishers, they will be critics and those who don’t like what I write or what I do.

But I am ready to go there. My father says that confidence is like a muscle; you have to keep doing things to strengthen it, everyday, and it will get stronger.

I think writing is the same. It has to be exercised, again and again. The page is like a gym. Some days I’m dying to get there and work it all out, pour anger, frustration, bile out of myself. Other days I know I should go but it’s comfortable where I am and I am sluggish, reluctant, even though I know it’s not good for me. But oh, how good it feels to go there and work hard and to feel spent afterwards. To feel that sparkling virtuosity of the writer who went to the page and worked hard, even though they didn’t feel like it.

I’ve never been fitter. I’m ready to travel to those new lands. But there is no ship to take me there yet. Who knows, I may have to make my own raft and sail myself there. But I will get there.

And what shall we do in the mean time, you and I, whilst we stride towards that port? Well, we can light a fire and sing songs of contests, and how this was voted as one of the best 25 writing blogs announced in the feasting halls of Editor Unleashed. I may get drunk and tell you how Post-Apocalyptic Publishing got the most votes in the fiction writing blog category, and expound upon the generosity of the readers that supported me. But I’ll probably stick with tea and English habit of not blowing ones trumpet.

Or we could go to the little town of Chinese Whisperings, and you could keep me company whilst I wait impatiently for my turn to write. I’m dreadfully impatient you see. Forgive me.

And what better to lay beneath our feet but stories, yes! Stories to pave the way to the port. It’s Short Story Club time, my friends, time to give me your ideas, your opening lines, your questions. Tie them to the feet of birds and throw them into the digital sky. Let them land here and give this fire something to consume. Let me write for you.

And in the end it’s true: every journey starts with the first step. It doesn’t matter if it is just a small step or a giant leap.
Go ahead Emma. I wish you luck you deserve and the courage you need. We’re here…

Here is our little contribution.
1. She awoke in a field it was pouring with rain but she was not getting wet!!!
2. He was looking in the mirror there was a crash of thunder and the mirror broke but his reflection was still there!!!
3. I am floating surrounded by a familiar scent I just can’t place!!!

Hey Em!
Looking forward to this month.
How about:
1) With a sarcastic “A-bubbye” she slammed down the phone in its cradle, grateful for the seconds of silence.
2)Groggily he came to, the inside of his skull beating like a tribal drum, the cold around him seeping to the very marrow of his bones.
3) On the platform stood her lone suitcase, filled with an assortment of items she most likely wouldn’t need where she was going.

I’m a new reader Love this blog and joined the short story club. It’s a great idea.

First line:

A shadow fell over her face as she looked into the little memory holder, seeing the last memory of her brother, his smiling face suddenly twisting in agony and his screams echoing through the room alongside the unseen assailant’s laughter.

Waking up nude and hungover was nothing new. Having it occur in a mall with shoppers gawking and no clue as to how he got there was a new twist. He wanted nothing more than to ask the crowd if anyone saw his arrival but realizing your tongue has been cut out is NOT conducive to regaining clarity.

“Before we get too far into the story, let’s get one thing out in the open right from the start: he had no intention of spending the rest of his life as a well-behaved little cog in a huge machine owned and operated by someone else.”

“Her breath caught in her throat as she realized that it was not a dream–not at all, for there he was, in her room, his swash completely unbuckled as he began moving toward her. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. She was born a poor young lass in Pittsburgh.”

Okay, I am officially impressed, and ever so slightly disturbed – the right kind of disturbed I hasten to add. Seems to be a darker tone this month, winner announced next week, but already I am struggling to choose between several that have got the cogs turning…

“I think writing is the same. It has to be exercised, again and again. The page is like a gym. Some days I’m dying to get there and work it all out, pour anger, frustration, bile out of myself. Other days I know I should go but it’s comfortable where I am and I am sluggish, reluctant, even though I know it’s not good for me. But oh, how good it feels to go there and work hard and to feel spent afterwards. To feel that sparkling virtuosity of the writer who went to the page and worked hard, even though they didn’t feel like it.”

[...] “I think back to when I started this blog. I was terrified of all of it. It literally took months to publish my first post. Then I was gloriously Havi’d (yes, that should be a verb). Then I found Diana and Graham, then later Twitching Grey and of course, Paperback Jack. And so many others.” – From Stories to pave the Path to Dreams [...]

Just read The Owner – a well written piece and I enjoyed it very much. It’s one of those “what if?” type stories, pondering the ramifications – the human impact – of a most unusual change to the physics of the universe.

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